Fuel shortage adds to stress in areas hit by superstorm

Saturday

Nov 3, 2012 at 12:01 AMNov 3, 2012 at 2:25 PM

NEW YORK - Tempers frayed in long gas lines and millions were still without electricity across the Northeast yesterday as the death toll from superstorm Sandy hit 102 and crews searched for more victims in devastated communities in New York and New Jersey.

NEW YORK — Tempers frayed in long gas lines and millions were still without electricity across the Northeast yesterday as the death toll from superstorm Sandy hit 102 and crews searched for more victims in devastated communities in New York and New Jersey.

New York City canceled its annual marathon in the face of mounting anger as utilities restored power to about a million East Coast homes and businesses. About 3.5?million customers were still in the dark four days after Sandy hit the U.S. coast.

The massive storm brought 80-mph winds and a record surge of seawater to Manhattan, Staten Island and coastal towns and cities across the Northeast on Monday, sweeping homes from their foundations, shattering piers and swamping subway tunnels.

Forty-one people died in New York City, about half of them in Staten Island, which was overrun by a wall of water.

Acute gasoline shortages led to long lines across the region. The government sought to ease the crunch by tapping strategic reserves and waiving rules that barred foreign-flagged ships from taking gas, diesel and other products from the Gulf of Mexico to Northeast ports.

The Obama administration also directed the Defense Logistics Agency to purchase up to 12 million gallons of unleaded fuel and 10 million gallons of diesel fuel for distribution to areas affected by Sandy.

“There should be a real change in conditions, and people should see it quickly,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.

Starting before dawn yesterday, long lines of cars snaked around gasoline stations. Some lines stretched for miles.

“It’s a catastrophe,” said Anthony Ennab, a 21-year-old student, as he waited in line at a Staten Island gas station with a container. “If I had an emergency, I would have no gas.”

Police were in place at many locations to keep the peace between frustrated drivers. Less than half of all gas stations in New York City, Long Island and New Jersey operated on Thursday because of power outages and limited supplies.

President Barack Obama, locked in a tight race with Republican rival Mitt Romney, has so far received praise for his handling of the storm. But scenes of angry victims could affect the campaign with the presidential election days away.

Sandy started as a late-season hurricane in the Caribbean, where it killed 69 people. At its peak, it stretched from the Carolinas to Connecticut and was the largest storm by area to hit the United States in decades.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said he had spoken to the father of two boys, aged 2 and 4, who were swept from their mother’s arms as she tried to escape rising waters on Staten Island. Their father is a sanitation worker and was helping the city respond to the storm when it happened, Bloomberg said.

“It just breaks your heart to even think about it,” Bloomberg said yesterday. “While life in much of our city is getting back to normal, for New Yorkers that have lost loved ones, the storm left a wound that I think will never heal.”

Search crews scoured beaches and went house-to-house in Staten Island and other neighborhoods in New York and New Jersey looking for bodies.

In Brooklyn’s Coney Island, home to a large Russian immigrant community, Anna Ladd’s basement still held seawater and she was without power and gas. Ladd, 62, has applied to the Federal Emergency Management Agency for help but was wary of what aid, if any, she would receive.

“We have a saying in Russia — when someone promises something, you have to wait three more years until they deliver,” she said.

Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano visited Staten Island yesterday amid angry assertions by some residents that the New York borough had been ignored.

“A lot of people are hurting and we want to work through the next days and hours to get people on their feet as quickly as possible,” Napolitano told reporters.

Bloomberg reversed an earlier decision to go ahead with the marathon, which was expected to draw more than 40,000 runners, after rising criticism from residents who said the city should focus on recovery. He said the race had become a source of “controversy and division.”

“We cannot allow a controversy over an athletic event — even one as meaningful as this — to distract attention away from all the critically important work that is being done to recover from the storm and get our city back on track,” he said.

Runner Arthur Sorenson, 51, expressed disappointment but said he would put his energy into fixing his Long Island home, which was swamped by Sandy’s storm surge.

“All the nasty things that were written and tweeted, it’s a race, people!” Sorenson said. “I just wonder if all the people who opposed the marathon so much will use that energy for good.”

Michael Cremer, 45, a benefits consultant, said before the cancellation was announced that the marathon had become a “symbol of insensitivity” to Staten Island.

“Staten Islanders feel like the forgotten people,” Cremer said. “The thing about the marathon is just mind-boggling and people here are just extremely angry. … The insensitivity of Mayor Bloomberg is just unbelievable. We’re one of the five boroughs. We’re not a little town in upstate New York."

Forecasts for colder weather added to the tension.

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